Here you go Boom. I finally remembered to take, and now upload, a pic of my classroom where I DM two public groups in 5e D&D. I put maps on the big board, and we can reference rules on the chromebooks or paper. I have purchased most of the pathfinder pawns and they combine great with the flip mats. Obviously we don't use all of this technology at the same time to play D&D, but it is fun to have access to $10,000 in tech to utilize in enhancing our games.
Good times were had until a wild dire boar appeared!
pragmatic (adj.)
The opposite of idealistic is pragmatic, a word that describes a philosophy of "doing what works best."
From Greek pragma "deed," the word has historically described philosophers and politicians who were
concerned more with real-world application of ideas than with abstract notions. A pragmatic person
is sensible, grounded, and practical.
Last edited by boombrakh on Sat Jun 06, 2015 2:24 pm, edited 1 time in total.
pragmatic (adj.)
The opposite of idealistic is pragmatic, a word that describes a philosophy of "doing what works best."
From Greek pragma "deed," the word has historically described philosophers and politicians who were
concerned more with real-world application of ideas than with abstract notions. A pragmatic person
is sensible, grounded, and practical.
Last edited by boombrakh on Sat Jun 06, 2015 2:24 pm, edited 1 time in total.
pragmatic (adj.)
The opposite of idealistic is pragmatic, a word that describes a philosophy of "doing what works best."
From Greek pragma "deed," the word has historically described philosophers and politicians who were
concerned more with real-world application of ideas than with abstract notions. A pragmatic person
is sensible, grounded, and practical.
Last edited by boombrakh on Sat Jun 06, 2015 2:24 pm, edited 1 time in total.
pragmatic (adj.)
The opposite of idealistic is pragmatic, a word that describes a philosophy of "doing what works best."
From Greek pragma "deed," the word has historically described philosophers and politicians who were
concerned more with real-world application of ideas than with abstract notions. A pragmatic person
is sensible, grounded, and practical.
If I could "like" your map Heegz, I would. Drawing those always was the start of any adventure/game/campaign for me.
It's one of the things I miss most about PnP.
<paazin>: internet relationships are really a great idea
For the record, I didn't draw that specific map. Although I have drawn much worse and much nicer maps. Cartography is something I didn't realize I enjoyed until I was in my thirties.
My shadowrun group uses Skype for communication and roll20 for the system.
First Character: Zyrus Meynolt, the serene Water Genasi berserker. "I am the embodiment of the oceans; serene until you summon the storm." Zyrus: http://tinyurl.com/9emdbnd
Second Character: Damien Collins, the atypical druid. "What? Being a stick in the mud is boring. No pun intended grins"
Western Heartlands HDM: On break. PM for emergencies
Adanu wrote:My shadowrun group uses Skype for communication and roll20 for the system.
Dungeonworld, roll20... but roll20 audio has been known to crap out at inopportune times, and at least one of us has Skype crap out a lot. So we've even tried "Google Hangouts" which seemed to work ok.
ALFA NWN2 PCs: Rhaggot of the Bruised-Eye, and Bamshogbo
ALFA NWN1 PC: Jacobim Foxmantle
ALFA NWN1 Dead PC: Jon Shieldjack